Greetings
I have workstations that are being used int telnet only mode. There are
a couple of them that get used infrequently. If you go up to them, the
monitor is usually in powersave mode. It takes about 35 seconds for the
monitor to become usable again after pressing a key.
Is there a way
On Fri, 2004-08-27 at 10:27, David Johnston wrote:
Did you do this on the remote host, or before telnetting? Also, for
BS, don't type BS, just hit the backspace key (I'm sorry if I
wasn't clear).
I attempted just about everything. Of course bash interprets the
backspace (and backspaces
On Wed, 2004-08-25 at 09:24, David Johnston wrote:
If that doesn't work, you can try remapping the console keyboard on
the
terminals. For information on how to do that, look at man loadkeys
and the files in /lib/kbd/keymaps. This is likely to be
time-consuming;
you will have to use the LTSP
On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 16:43, David Johnston wrote:
On Mon, 2004-08-23 at 07:23, Dirk H Bartley wrote:
Greetings
I have users on LTSP terminals logging in to a server to get access to a
business application. In this application the backspace key does not
work from the client.
I used
Greetings
I have users on LTSP terminals logging in to a server to get access to a
business application. When using an X session with a gnome terminal, I
can set the compatibility to backspace key generates control-H to get
the backspace key to work. Lately I have them using LTSP terminals in
Greetings
I've succeeded in using an ltsp workstation as a remote serial port.
There are two questions I have though of how I could make it better.
1) I am using ser2net on the workstation and am running it by editing
the inittab in /opt/ltsp/i386/etc and adding the line